Crypto 2014 rump session

This year the rump-session chairs are also helping organize carpools
from Crypto (Santa Barbara) down to USENIX (San Diego).
Send email to rumpsession at box dot cr dot yp dot to
with subject line "carpool"
and with the message body explaining what you're offering or requesting
(e.g., you have a 4-seat car and are planning to drive down starting 21:00 Wednesday;
e.g., you're hoping for a seat after the rump session Tuesday).
The Crypto 2014 rump session
took place Tuesday 19 August 2014
from 19:15 PDT to 23:00 PDT.
(The IACR Award Ceremony began at 19:00 PDT.)
Daniel J. Bernstein and Tanja Lange served as chairs.

The call for submissions has been archived below.
During the rump session,
slides were gradually made available
from presenters who had agreed to have their slides officially online.
One additional set of slides was uploaded after the rump session.

Call for submissions (archived)

When did Wang announce collisions in MD4, MD5, HAVAL-128, and RIPEMD?
When did NIST announce the withdrawal of the Data Encryption Standard?
When did van Someren introduce oblivious transfers of zero knowledge?
The Crypto 2004 rump session!

When did Osvik, Shamir, and Tromer announce AES key extraction in 65 milliseconds?
When did Kelsey, Schneier, Vaudenay, and Wagner expose cryptographic plagiarism?
When did Alice meet Bob face to face for the first time?
The Crypto 2005 rump session!

When did Bleichenbacher announce pencil-and-paper RSA forgeries?
When did Cryptico announce a $1000 prize for the best cryptanalysis of Rabbit?
When did Callas, Cannoy, and van Someren introduce lettuce-based cryptography?
The Crypto 2006 rump session!

When did Biham, Dunkelman, Indesteege, Keller, and Preneel announce successful cryptanalysis of KeeLoq?
When did Clark and Sale challenge the cryptographic community to race a rebuilt Colossus?
When did Tromer, Ellison, Miller, and Wright present the perfect one-way hash?
The Crypto 2007 rump session!

When did Tromer announce successful cryptanalysis of the Gpcode.ak ransomware virus?
When did Enright, Rescorla, Savage, Shacham, and Yilek present a factorization of the IACR public key?
When did Rescorla, Savage, Shacham, and Spies introduce dryness-rights management?
The Crypto 2008 rump session!

When did Petit and Quisquater announce preimages in the SL_2 hash?
When did Stevens demonstrate live man-in-the-middle attacks on HTTPS via MD5 collisions?
When did Suga introduce UbeHashCoool?
The Crypto 2009 rump session!

When did Gentry and Halevi announce FHE cryptanalytic challenges with public keys too large to fit on IBM's web servers?
When did the mobile-phone industry open up ZUC for public review?
When did Heninger and Shacham present a two-thousand-slide historical review of cryptography?
The Crypto 2010 rump session!

When did Bogdanov, Khovratovich, and Rechberger announce biclique cryptanalysis of full AES?
When did Peters demonstrate the benefits of Springer's editing?
When did Suga introduce the mop construction?
The Crypto 2011 rump session!

When did Vaudenay announce successful cryptanalysis of a cryptosystem published at Crypto 2012?
When did Matsui offer $1500 to beat a dead FEAL?
When did Heninger demonstrate RSA private-key recovery via Google?
The Crypto 2012 rump session!

When did Shamir announce a 2^64 attack against 4 steps of the LED-128 block cipher?
When did NIST announce a public online service to generate random numbers for you?
When did a dozen copies of Keith Alexander burst into song?
The Crypto 2013 rump session!

The first Crypto rump session took place in 1981
and was immediately heralded as the most important meeting in cryptography.
Each subsequent Crypto rump session has reached a new level of historical significance,
outstripped only by the Crypto rump sessions that followed it.
The Crypto 2014 rump session will attempt to live up to,
and if possible exceed,
the exceptionally high standards set by previous Crypto rump sessions;
but it relies critically on your contributions!
Do you have breaking news, progress reports,
or other topics of interest to the cryptographic community?
Can you keep your talk short and entertaining?
Fill out the
submission form
and ask for a talk slot!

As an added incentive for putting serious effort into non-serious rump-session talks,
the editors of the
Journal of Craptology
usually promise to invite a paper from the most entertaining rump-session speakers.
But we haven't heard from them yet.

There is also a non-rump part of Crypto 2014.
The non-rump part has
its own web pages,
including
its own program.
Warning: These links are provided purely for informational purposes.
The rump-session chairs cannot guarantee the quality of the non-rump part of Crypto 2014.